Kathimerini English

PM holding out for debt relief

Tsipras seeks to sweeten measures pill

-

With tonight’s Parliament vote on a fresh batch of highly unpopular measures expected to take an even heavier toll on the government’s standing, it has launched a frantic effort to shift the focus to the positives – namely what it insists are imminent debt relief measures from the country’s creditors.

This came through loud and clear during yesterday’s debate in Parliament on the new bill, as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras exuded confidence and optimism that he “will be forced to wear a tie” – in reference to the promise he made back in 2015 that he would wear a tie only when the country’s receives substantia­l debt relief.

“The news is so positive that we are having difficulty believing it,” he told Parliament reporters. He was quick to add, however, that people shouldn’t get carried away with their expectatio­ns, but lit up again just moments later, saying that the news “is too good to be true.” Tsipras also said that he was certain, after meeting Internatio­nal Mon- etary Fund chief Christine Lagarde in Beijing on Saturday, that the Washington-based fund means business when it says it won’t join the Greek bailout program without the country’s debt becoming sustainabl­e.

He also said German Chancellor Angela Merkel was getting increasing­ly involved in the talks about reducing Greek debt. If everything goes as planned, he said that an agreement on debt relief will be secured by early June at the latest, if not the May 22 Eurogroup.

According to the government’s roadmap, Greece will then be included in the European Central Bank’s quantitati­ve easing program, which will pave the way for a trial return to internatio­nal markets.

An agreement on debt relief, he said, will lead to a further reduction, below 5 percent, in yields of 10-year Greek bonds.

Tsipras, however, did not say what would happened if the IMF doesn’t join the Greek program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Greece